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Understanding Higher Vocational Education in China: Vocationalism vs Confucianism |
Jie XIONG( ) |
Department of Educational Policy Studies, University of Alberta, Edmonton AB T6G 2G5, Canada |
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Abstract The development of higher vocational education in China embodies a global trend of vocationalism that values skills and skilled workers, which is opposite, in some ways, to the Confucian tradition in Chinese education that values theoretical knowledge related to good governance. As the cultural trend supporting the development of higher vocational education, vocationalism is implicated in certain challenges including high tuition fees, limited upward mobility, and neglect of the humanities in education. Humanities for moral education, and mechanisms for upward mobility on equal terms for all, which are fundamental elements of Confucianism, may help resolve these challenges. This paper embodies the dialectic of a global trend and local culture in educational reform within the context of globalization.
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Keywords
higher vocational education
vocationalism
Confucianism
globalization
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Corresponding Author(s):
Jie XIONG,Email:jiex@ualberta.ca
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Issue Date: 05 December 2011
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